Spencer Cronk

It’s fair to say that if this City Council ever wants to hire another city manager – not a likely short-term prospect – it will do things differently than it did in finding Minneapolis City Coordinator Spencer Cronk. Last spring, Council accepted the advice of search consultant Russell Reynolds Associates that keeping applicant names secret – until the selection of a single finalist – would mean a better candidate pool. In the end, the city named a half-dozen semifinalists, but only after a farcical (and failed) attempt at secret interviews – and a lawsuit from the Austin American-States­man charging violations of the Open Meetings Act.

With that lawsuit still pending, on Jan. 10 the city was informed by Attorney General Ken Paxton‘s office that most of its attempts to withhold information violate the Public Information Act. Assistant Attorney General Matthew Taylor wrote Assistant City Attorney Neal Falgoust that most of the city’s requested exemptions from disclosure are impermissible under state law. Taylor rejected the argument that the information (requested by media, including the Chronicle) constitutes either “trade secrets” (for Russell Reynolds) or is covered by attorney-client privilege, or that applicant information might be “private” because it could be “intimate or highly embarrassing.” Taylor’s letter allows that some very specific information (e.g., personal email addresses) might be withheld – a category that apparently included information that “pertains to an agent of the United States Drug Enforcement Admin­istration.” (If that person was a finalist, he or she would have faced an interesting Austin introduction.) The city hasn’t yet officially responded, but would have to sue the AG to overturn Taylor’s opinion.

Council members have defended the confidential search as “awkward” or even “farcical” but necessary, although several were uncomfortable with it from the beginning, relieved when the semifinalist names were revealed, and now say they’re delighted with their choice. Let’s hope Cronk is everything they’ve been searching for.

Mis-Managed

A version of this article appeared in print on Jan 19, 2018 with the headline: Mis-Managed

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Contributing writer and former news editor Michael King has reported on city and state politics for the Chronicle since 2000. He was educated at Indiana University and Yale, and from 1977 to 1985 taught at UT-Austin. He has been the editor of the Houston Press and The Texas Observer, and has reported and written widely on education, politics, and cultural subjects.